Henry Hall (as the sheriff), Louise Currie (as Stella Saunders) and Dan White (as Deputy Elmer)
in Placerita Canyon, in a scene from the Bela Lugosi picture, "Voodoo Man" (Monogram, 1944).
Lugosi never topped his 1931 classic "Dracula" and was on the outs by
1941 when Monogram decided to try to capitalize on his name. Monogram, king of the "B"
Western, put Lugosi under contract and churned out nine cultish horror flicks during the war years.
(Lugosi actually made 10 pictures for Monogram, including the earlier "Mysterious Mr.
Wong" in 1935.)
Directed by William Beaudine and written by Robert Charles, "Voodoo Man" features
Lugosi as the twisted Dr. Richard Marlowe, who uses voodoo in an effort to revive his long-dead
wife — using the life-essence of beautiful girls he traps in his dungeon beneath his mansion.
Image courtesy of John F. White, grandson of Dan White. Photo identifications courtesy of Ken Hanke.
At the same time Monogram Pictures executives Trem Carr and W. Ray Johnston were squeezing the last drops of star power out of aging Western luminaries such as
Hoot Gibson, Buck Jones and Johnny Mack Brown at the studio Monogram rented in Placerita Canyon in the early 1940s,
Carr and Johnston did the same thing in the horror genre with Bela Lugosi, whose career had peaked with 1931's "Dracula."
Monogram Pictures Studio, early 1940s. Collection of Mark Wanamaker/Bison Archives.
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Lugosi starred in nine pictures for Monogram from 1941-1944, known to horror fans as the "Monogram 9." Produced by Sam Katzman's Banner Productions, the first of them
("Invisible Ghost" and "Spooks Run Wild" from 1941) were probably filmed at a Poverty Row rental studio. In 1942 Monogram purchased a Poverty Row studio
of its own in East Hollywood that had been used for movie making since 1912-1913 — initially by Essanay and then by Kalem, both A-list production companies of the 1910s. The studio changed hands
in the 1920s and 1930s, devolving into a low-budget rental with two sound stages and a back lot. In 1942-1943, Monogram added a third sound stage, built a New York street and acquired
additional property, expanding the studio to 1725-1735 Fleming Street (renamed Hoover Street), alternately known by its other frontage at 4401 Sunset Blvd.
Monogram formed Allied Artists in 1946, the year Carr died, and used the Fleming Street/Sunset Boulevard studio until 1964 when Allied Artists moved to New York. The studio became a rental again
until KCET-TV bought it in 1971 and renovated the old buildings.
In 2011, KCET sold the property for $42 million to the Church of Scientology, which dramatically modernized the studio and reopened it in 2016 as Scientology Media Productions,
the church's "global media center." It preserved the bones and bricks of the original buildings, which are a City of Los Angeles Historic Cultural Monument. They can be
seen in this Scientology video from 2016-2017.
Most of the "Monogram 9" with Lugosi used this studio for interiors. There weren't many exteriors in the Lugosi pictures; they were usually driving scenes
filmed on Placerita Canyon Road near the movie ranch where Monogram was churning out the Western "buddy pictures" — just a hop and a skip from W. Ray Johnston's home
on 8th Street where he could keep an eye on things.
The "Monogram 9" are:
Invisible Ghost (1941);
Spooks Run Wild (1941);
Black Dragons (1942);
Bowery at Midnight (1942);
The Corpse Vanishes (1942);
Ghosts on the Loose (1943);
The Ape Man (1943);
Return of the Ape Man (1944) and
Voodoo Man (1944).
JW4402: 9600 dpi jpeg from smaller jpeg. Online only.